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Corn and Soybean Bugs …or things that eat your dinner before you get to Complete Metamorphosis •About 88% of insects of through this like butterflies, bees, flies, beetles Incomplete Metamorphosis Grasshoppers, dragonflies and cockroaches go through this, which is about 12% of insects Corn Insects Corn Rootworm Larvae • In the winter, they lay eggs in soil • In the spring, the eggs hatch and eat corn roots • Corn Rootworm Adults come in three types • • • Northern corn rootworm larva Northern Western Southern • They produce 1 generation per year • They feed on ears, silks, pollen Western corn rootworm larva Wireworm • Larvae feed on roots and plant growing point and stem • It takes several years to become adult Click Beetle • The adult doesn’t cause plant injury; just the larvae do Grubs • An example of a grub is a Japanese beetle • Grape colaspis • White grub is also called a June Beetle) • They feed on roots Japanese Beetle Grape colaspis June Beetle Grub Damage Cutworms • The Black Cutworm is • • • • • • the most common and important Sandhill is another type Variegated is another type They produce several generations per year Young larvae feed on corn foliage Older larvae cut plants off near soil level They feed at night Variegated Black Cutworm Damage Corn Leaf Aphid • They come up from the southern U.S. • They produce up to 10 generations per year • They eat by piercing and sucking • They are especially damaging during drought Nymph Adult Corn Leaf Aphid Damage Corn Earworm • Many crops affected by the corn earworm such as field corn, cotton, soybean, sweet corn, and popcorn • They damage corn ears and the cotton bowl Corn Earworm Damage Fall Armyworm • They eat the whorl and leaves on a plant • They migrate north from south • They travel or move in large numbers which gives them their name True Armyworm Armyworm Damage Flea Beetles • The larvae feed on plant roots • The adults feed on leaves • They transfer bacterial diseases to plant Flea Beetle Damage European Corn Borer • They attack corn, peppers, potatoes • They produce 2-3 generations per year • In the winter the larvae live in field debris • In the spring, they become adults • In June, the adults lay eggs on plant, the larvae feed on leaves and bore into plant stem, then become adults • In July – October, the adults lay eggs, larvae damage inside stalk making the plants fall down or a poor ear develops European Corn Borer Soybean Insects Japanese Beetle • The larvae feed on roots • The adults chew on and and damage leaves • This means the pod doesn’t fill well and there is less to harvest Stink Bug • The adult attacks the pod and seed causing damage • This means some pods don’t develop or there are small, shriveled beans in pods Stink Bug Damage Stink bugs feed on plant fluids by inserting their needlelike mouthparts into stems, leaves or seed pods. While feeding, they inject materials into the plant to digestion and remove sap. Mexican Bean Beetle • The larvae feed on leaves. They are very large larvae with a very large appetite) • The adults look like an overgrown “lady bug” Mexican Bean Beetle Damage Spider Mites • This insect pierces and sucks out the materials inside the plant cell • During drought, the damage can be severe Spider Mite Damage Bean Leaf Beetle • The larvae feed on roots and root nodules • The adult causes leaf damage Bean Leaf Beetle Damage White Grubs • The root damage look like that done on corn roots True white grub, showing raster European chafer larvae are white with an orange-brown head and dark back end. You can tell them apart from the other white grubs by the Y-pattern of the back end bristles (rasters). White Grub Damage How To Control Chemical Control • Insecticides kill bugs • Herbicides kill weeds • Nematicides kill roundworms • Farmers apply the from the air, from a tractor onto the soil and inject them into the soil Biological Control • This word means control using other living things • Examples include parasitic insects, fungi, and bacteria Biotechnology Control • Bacillus thuringiensis is a bacteria that causes larvae stop eating, become limp, shrink, die, and decompose • Fungi are used to control weeds • Genetic engineering design plants to naturally resist disease